Self-criticism and anxiety in the general population
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1
School of Medicine, Queen's University
2
Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia
Submission date: 2024-02-20
Acceptance date: 2024-06-08
Publication date: 2025-01-14
Corresponding author
David Kealy
Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia
Arch Psych Psych 2024;26(4)
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ABSTRACT
Aim of the study:
Self-criticism is the personality trait of negative self-evaluation and is a transdiagnostic feature of many psychopathologies. The research and theoretical models of self-criticism have described its central role in the development and maintenance of depression. However, the relationship between self-criticism and anxiety, a core feature of many prevalent mental disorders in the general population, has yet to be adequately explored. The present study investigated the associations between self-criticism, anxiety, and worry, after accounting for the effects of five-factor personality traits.
Subject or material and methods:
Adults (N=343) recruited through an online platform completed standardized questionnaires that assess for self-criticism, anxiety, and worry symptoms, as well as five-factor personality traits. Demographic data were collected using a short self-designed questionnaire.
Results:
Findings revealed that self-criticism was positively and strongly associated with anxiety and worry symptoms, independent of the five-factor personality traits. Also, neuroticism was positively associated with self-criticism, anxiety, and worry, and extraversion and conscientiousness were negatively associated with anxiety and worry.
Discussion:
The nature of the association between self-criticism and anxiety remains unclear. Perhaps, in response to the excessive negative emotions and self-evaluation that self-criticism generates, the individual may develop maladaptive coping behaviours that produce anxiety.
Conclusions:
Overall, participants who were self-critical were more likely to be anxious, suggesting the need for further investigation into the directionality and underlying mechanisms of this relationship.